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Miami (Ohio) finally lost its first game, and now the RedHawks are no lock for March Madness

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Miami (Ohio) finally lost its first game, and now the RedHawks are no lock for March Madness
Sport

Sport

Miami (Ohio) finally lost its first game, and now the RedHawks are no lock for March Madness

2026-03-13 06:02 Last Updated At:06:10

CLEVELAND (AP) — Travis Steele went 31 games and 363 days before addressing a losing locker room.

Now, the Miami (Ohio) coach and his squad must wait an excruciating three days before finding out if they've made the NCAA Tournament.

The 20th-ranked RedHawks became the last men’s Division I program to fall from the unbeaten ranks on Thursday as UMass rallied in the second half for an 87-83 victory in the Mid-American Conference Tournament quarterfinals.

“It was a little bit of shell shock. We hate to lose, and our guys put a lot into it. So does UMass,” Steele said. “Not a lot was said. I think sometimes you’ve got to get the emotion out of you first before directing your team. So we’ll do that when we get back to the hotel.”

Miami was the fifth team this century to go undefeated in the regular season and the first since Gonzaga in 2020-21. The RedHawks join Saint Joseph’s — which lost to Xavier in the 2004 Atlantic 10 quarterfinals — as teams whose unbeaten run ended in their conference tournament.

That Saint Joe's team didn’t have to worry about its March Madness fate. Led by Jameer Nelson and Delonte West, the Hawks were the top-ranked team in the country at the end of the regular season and earned a No. 1 seed in the NCAA Tournament.

Miami’s road is more precarious. Its strength of schedule ranks 344th out of 365 Division I teams, according to the NCAA Evaluation Tool.

The RedHawks faced no Tier 1 teams and were 2-0 against Tier 2 squads.

“Undefeated means something, and so my hope is that they would make it,” said Grant Hill, who will call the NCAA Tournament and the Final Four for CBS and TNT Sports. “They’ve got a chip on their shoulder. I think to see them get into the tournament, they want to prove themselves against some of the bigger teams.”

The last time the MAC got two bids was 1999. Miami got the at-large bid that year after losing to Kent State in the tournament final and advanced to the Sweet 16.

UMass coach Frank Martin — who led South Carolina to the Final Four in 2017 — echoed many in saying that Miami deserves a tournament bid.

“It’d be an embarrassment. A complete embarrassment if this league doesn’t get two teams in,” Martin said.

Steele, who was still reeling from the loss, wasn’t in the mood to hear about the MAC possibly having two teams in the field.

“I couldn’t care less about the MAC getting multi bids, just to be quite frank. I know the MAC probably wanted that,” he said. “It’s more about just putting ourselves in the best position, which I think we’ve done. Our guys have earned the right, in my opinion, to play the NCAA Tournament.

“I’m not letting anybody take (over) my mind. I’m not going to waste one second. When you’ve been fired before (at Xavier), you don’t care anymore. You don’t care what people think. You don’t have to be politically correct all that stuff, guys. I’m just telling you, I’m going to live life the way I live it unapologetically.”

Miami senior Peter Suder, the MAC Player of the Year, said his team’s resume speaks for itself.

“I think we proved during the regular season that we earned a spot, but I can just control what I can control,” he said. “We’re going to still get better every day and stay consistent with what we do. So we’re going to learn from this and face the next challenge in whatever’s in front of us.”

The last team to go through the regular season unbeaten and not make the NCAA Tournament was Alcorn State in 1978-79. That was because the Southwest Athletic Conference was in a transition period to Division I and did not have an automatic bid.

Even after Thursday’s loss, many bracketologists still have the RedHawks in the field. ESPN’s Joe Lunardi has Miami supplanting Auburn, while Fox Sports’ Mike DeCourcy also has them in.

Neither project the RedHawks going to Dayton for the First Four.

“It’s a legendary accomplishment and one game today doesn’t change that in my mind,” Miami athletic director David Sayler said. “I believe the committee will get it, and certainly anyone who played the game and knows what the grind of a season is like, going undefeated in league play, they get it as well.”

The win over Miami was UMass’ first in the MAC Tournament. The Minutemen are in their first season in the conference after 43 years in the Atlantic 10.

Eian Elmer’s 3-pointer gave Miami a 69-58 advantage with 8:33 remaining, but the Minutemen rallied and tied it at 71-all with 5:33 remaining.

The key to UMass’ victory was controlling the boards. The Minutemen outrebounded the RedHawks 41-24 and had 23 second-chance points off 17 offensive boards.

Martin said he was more nervous coming into Thursday’s game than at any point during his 20 years as a head coach. He hopes UMass can match Xavier’s run. After beating Saint Joseph’s, the Musketeers went on to win the tournament.

Martin was emotional reflecting on the game, and said after a long pause, “I feel bad for Miami, but I’m happy for our guys.”

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Miami (Ohio) guard Peter Suder, center, dives for the ball next to Massachusetts guard Marcus Banks, left, in the second half of a basketball game in the quarterfinals of the Mid-American Conference tournament, Thursday, March 12, 2026, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

Miami (Ohio) guard Peter Suder, center, dives for the ball next to Massachusetts guard Marcus Banks, left, in the second half of a basketball game in the quarterfinals of the Mid-American Conference tournament, Thursday, March 12, 2026, in Cleveland. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

BANGKOK (AP) — Myanmar’s military has commissioned new combat aircraft to boost its air capacities, state media reported Friday, as the army steps up efforts to regain territory from resistance forces in the country’s civil war.

The state-run Global New Light of Myanmar newspaper did not specify the number or types of the newly commissioned aircraft, but photos released by the military suggest it received four jet fighters, including two Russian-made Su-30 aircraft widely used for bombing and combat missions.

It was the sixth time the miliary had commissioned new aircraft since it seized power from the elected government of Aung San Suu Kyi in February 2021, triggering armed resistance across the country.

Russia and China are major supporters and arms suppliers of Myanmar’s military government. Western nations have imposed sanctions including the prohibition of arms sales.

The newspaper cited Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing, head of Myanmar’s ruling military government, as saying that the air force needs to be strong to "protect the state interest effectively.”

He added the air force had demonstrated its capabilities in previous anti-insurgency and counterterrorism operations as well as missions to repel external aggression, according to the report.

The military government has lost large swaths of the country to pro-democracy People’s Defense Forces and ethnic armed groups. It has intensified efforts to retake territory and scored several battlefield gains, and its airstrikes have often caused civilian casualties.

The opposition National Unity Government, or NUG, which coordinates resistance to military rule, and the Karen National Union, an ethnic armed group fighting the army, said in separate statements Monday that about 30 to 40 people were killed when the military used drones, jet fighters and artillery during a ground offensive in villages in the lower-central Bago region between March 5 to March 7.

The powerful Arakan Army ethnic militia, based in western Rakhine state, said Wednesday that 116 captured army soldiers, including officers held in a detention camp in Ann township, were killed when eight military aircraft carried out aerial attacks on Sunday.

The military has not mentioned any attack in Bago and Rakhine. The reports could not be independently confirmed.

Nay Phone Latt, a spokesperson for the NUG, told the AP that the commissioning of new aircraft is intended to enhance continued airstrikes on civilian areas.

He said the military was “targeting civilians and continuing to carry out mass killings. It is important for the international community not to turn a blind eye to this reality.”

The Global New Light of Myanmar also said in a separate report that the military has regained control of the ancient town of Tagaung in northern Mandalay after a weekslong offensive.

Tagaung, located about 170 kilometers (105 miles) north of Mandalay, the country’s second-largest city, had been under the control of forces aligned with the NUG since August 2024.

The recapture of Tagaung, the last NUG-controlled town in Mandalay Region, marked the latest setback for opposition groups fighting the military.

Nay Phone Latt said resistance forces withdrew from the town after the military launched an offensive using large numbers of troops and heavy weapons, but they still maintain positions in areas outside it.

In this photo provided by the Myanmar Military True News Information Team, head of the ruling military government, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing attends a ceremony to commission new aircraft into its air force in Meiktila township in Mandalay region, Myanmar, Thursday, March.12, 2026. (The Myanmar Military True News Information Team via AP)

In this photo provided by the Myanmar Military True News Information Team, head of the ruling military government, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing attends a ceremony to commission new aircraft into its air force in Meiktila township in Mandalay region, Myanmar, Thursday, March.12, 2026. (The Myanmar Military True News Information Team via AP)

In this photo provided by the Myanmar Military True News Information Team, head of the ruling military government, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing attends a ceremony to commission new aircraft into its air force in Meiktila township in Mandalay region, Myanmar, Thursday, March.12, 2026. (The Myanmar Military True News Information Team via AP)

In this photo provided by the Myanmar Military True News Information Team, head of the ruling military government, Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing attends a ceremony to commission new aircraft into its air force in Meiktila township in Mandalay region, Myanmar, Thursday, March.12, 2026. (The Myanmar Military True News Information Team via AP)

In this photo provided by the Myanmar Military True News Information Team, newly commissioned aircraft are seen at an airbase in Meiktila township in Mandalay region, Myanmar, Thursday, March 12, 2026. (The Myanmar Military True News Information Team via AP)

In this photo provided by the Myanmar Military True News Information Team, newly commissioned aircraft are seen at an airbase in Meiktila township in Mandalay region, Myanmar, Thursday, March 12, 2026. (The Myanmar Military True News Information Team via AP)

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